The first two of these books were in the family bookshelf in the den in the summer of 1961. At some time after my William and Mary expulsion over Thanksgiving 1961 the books were removed.
Evelyn Ruth Duvall, Facts of Life and Love for Teenagers (1956, New York: Associated Press or S French) tried to present 1950s sexual morality in "acceptable" terms for high schoolers to read. We had a copy of it at home. Some of the discussions, about prostitution, for example, were constructive (although in a libertarian world it would no longer be illegal). There was a notorious section that distinguished between "latent homosexuality" and "overt homosexuality," a semantic note that became a critical focus in my confrontation with the William and Mary Dean of Men in November 1961, leading to my almost immediate expulsion. The author's intentions, given the time, were benign, however.
Gregor Ziemer, Education for Death, written after the author fled Nazi Germany in 1939, describes how youthh were educated in Hitler's Germany prior to WWII
Peter Wyden, Growing Up Straight (1968, New York, Stein and Day) was the classic offender that tried to show how sissy boys (like I was) could still grow up "sexually normal." Making everybody normal in this one aspect seemed to be society's highest priority. He even says at one point that men with no chest hair aren't completely manly.
Peter Tauber, The Sunshine Soldiers. (1972/ repub 2003, Higganum Hill, ISBN 0963518569). The book's cover reads "Army Basic training is an initiation into traditional American society. The ritual goes back to the founding of this nation. But in the Sixties the authoritarianism has change." The book is a diary of going through Army basic during the draft and conscription plus deferments driven Vietnam era. I provide a somewhat similar, if more sobering account, in my own DADT Chapter 2. I once called the author around 1973, before I moved into New York City. The title of the book is a bit of a tongue twister.